The arts&humanities project researched by @MonikaClass PI; & @N_A_Anderson, explores the way readers engage with their imaginings & memories when reading novels
I am co-organizing a workshop with @N_A_Anderson about novel-induced armchair travel and, more broadly, the relation of movement in, and being moved by, novels. We warmly invite proposals - here is the CFP: https://t.co/0NGFsF9eeq
It has been great to work and have a synchronous dialogue with colleagues in three different time zones including @N_A_Anderson @Dr_A_Hartl @caro_gebauer @DrDinter @Heidilulie @MirandaJBurgess @fa_nicole
And that’s a wrap on #moved2021 🎉 A massive thank you to all participants and the audience for this amazing workshop. We hope you enjoyed your time with us just as much as we did!
Thank you to Dr Carolin Gebauer @caro_gebauer from the Bergische University of Wuppertal @Uni_Wuppertal for highlighting #reading experiences of contemporary refugee narratives such as by #DinaNayeri and #JohnLanchester in Panel 5 of our virtual workshop #moved2021
Thank you to Professor Dr Sarah Heinz from the University of Wien @univienna for the discussion of the meaning of home in relation to the #motion and movement of characters and viral diseases in #Lockdown by #PeterMay in Panel 5 of our virtual workshop #moved2021
Panel 5: Refuge, Rest, and Refugeedom on Day 2 of “Moved by Movement in Novels” #moved2021@visceralreader examines #readers interacting with experiences of #motion and sedentary life in contemporary #literature
Our final presentation of #moved2021 is Dr Carolin Gebauer @caro_gebauer's presentation on “Sharing the Experience of Refugeedom: Embodied Narration in Contemporary Refugee Narratives” coming to us from @Uni_Wuppertal
Thank you to Andrea Talmann from the University of Stuttgart @Uni_Stuttgart for her presentation on navigation of empathy and spaces in Mrs Dalloway by #VirginiaWoolf via characters’ #motion and reflection in Panel 4 of our virtual workshop #moved2021
Happening now at #moved2021! Professor Sarah Heinz is joining us from @univienna for her talk “Reading Lockdown: Disturbing Sedentary Notions of Home in COVID-19 British Fiction“ 📚
Thank you to Dr Nicole Falkenhayner @fa_nicole from University of Freiburg @UniFreiburg and Dr Christiane Hansen from University of Koblenz-Landau @unikold for their joint presentation on affect transmission in writings by #SarahMoss and #SarahHall in Panel 4 of #moved2021
And this concludes the fourth panel of #moved2021. Did you enjoy it as much as we did? If so, we hope to see you back for the fifth and final panel of #moved2021 after a quick break ☕️
Panel 4: Aesthetics, Aisthesis, and Affect on Day 2 of “Moved by Movement in Novels” #moved2021@visceralreader discussed #readers engaging with aesthetic experiences, navigating spaces, and transmitting affect in #literature
Get ready, because Dr Nicole Falkenhayner @fa_nicole (@UniFreiburg) and Dr Christiane Hansen (@unikold) are about to present “An aisthesis of oppression – affect transmission in contemporary British prose by women writers” #moved2021
For her presentation "'Standing there at open windows': On the Threshold of Empathy in Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway" we welcome Andrea Talmann from @Uni_Stuttgart here at #moved2021
Thank you for the discussion of #physiognomy in writings by Johann Wolfgang von #Goethe and translations in connection with eighteenth-century philosophers by Dr Dan Mills from Chattahoochee Technical College @chattech in Panel 3 of our virtual workshop #moved2021
Thank you to David Lo from the University of Tübingen @uni_tue for his presentation on collective subjectivity in #poetry such as by William #Wordsworth impacting #reading experiences and translations in Panel 3 of our virtual workshop #moved2021
Thank you to Dr Monika Class @MonikaClass from the University of Mainz @unimainz for scrutinizing #readers interacting with characters’ active movement and #reading habits in Northanger Abbey by #JaneAusten in Panel 3 of our virtual workshop #moved2021